Re: (2/3) Fwd: Re: Annual report - can I interview you?
- From: Dave Neary <dneary gnome org>
- To: Emily Gonyer <emilyyrose gmail com>
- Cc: "Marketing-list gnome org" <Marketing-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: (2/3) Fwd: Re: Annual report - can I interview you?
- Date: Wed, 30 May 2012 21:09:41 +0200
Hi,
If you think so, I'm delighted to concur! I thought that some editing
and a little narrative would make for a better article, but I'm happy to
bow to your superior availability ;-)
Thank you!
Dave.
On 05/30/2012 04:41 PM, Emily Gonyer wrote:
Hi again, honestly, I think it'd be fine in the annual report as a
simple Q & A - theres a ton of great info here already, and aside from
adding more info directly related to the OPW I'm not sure what would be
needed. If its all right with you, I'll work on getting it edited for
grammar/spelling/etc and stuck on the wiki as such in the next day or two.
Emily
On Wed, May 30, 2012 at 6:26 AM, Dave Neary <dneary gnome org
<mailto:dneary gnome org>> wrote:
Hi all,
Email 2 of 3 re Marina interview for annual report.
Cheers,
Dave.
-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: Annual report - can I interview you?
Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2011 01:18:46 -0500 (EST)
From: Marina Zhurakhinskaya <marinaz redhat com
<mailto:marinaz redhat com>>
To: Dave Neary <dneary gnome org <mailto:dneary gnome org>>
CC: Juanjo Marin <juanjomarin96 yahoo es
<mailto:juanjomarin96 yahoo es>>, Emily Gonyer <emilyyrose gmail com
<mailto:emilyyrose gmail com>>, karen gnome org <mailto:karen gnome org>
Hi Dave,
Sorry about being a bit late with these. Let me know what time you
would like to talk on IRC tomorrow (Tuesday) or any other day. Any
time after 11am EST tomorrow should work for me.
Thanks!
Marina
Q. Marina, you've co-ordinated the GNOME Outreach Program for Women for
the past two years. Can you tell us how you got involved in GNOME
yourself?
I joined Red Hat six years ago to work on a social networking
product after seeing a posting from the team's manager on LinkedIn.
I had used Linux through my college years and at my previous job,
but I didn't have any experience contributing to free software. In
fact, I remember puzzling over why there was a choice between two
options - GNOME and KDE - at the login screen of my Red Hat
Enterprise Linux workstation at my previous job, and wondering how
was I supposed to know which one to pick.
Four years ago my original team was merged into the desktop team and
I started working on GNOME. With many great GNOME contributors out
there, it's uncommon for the desktop team to hire someone who is not
an established contributor, so the fact that I ended up working on
GNOME is a happy coincidence.
Q. How did you end up co-ordinating the Outreach Program for Women?
In August 2009, I received an e-mail from Diego Escalante Urrelo, on
behalf of the GNOME Board of Directors, asking me to organize the
outreach effort. Having just come from the Gran Canaria Desktop
Summit, it was very evident to me and others how few women there
were in the GNOME community. There are just 4 women in this[1] GNOME
group picture of about 160. Two other women are Stormy Peters and
Rosanna Yuen, who worked for the GNOME Foundation. The third woman
is Alia Merali, who joined her husband in attending several GUADECs
and helped with organizing GUADEC in Barcelona in 2006. It was very
exciting to me to have the mandate and the support of the GNOME
Foundation to involve more women in the GNOME community.
We started out by doing a round of introductions on the
gnome-women-list @gnome.org <http://gnome.org>, putting together a
page with mentors who can help women start contributing to GNOME,
working with the FSF on creating resources and recommendations for
encouraging women to get involved in free software, creating an
issue of the GNOME Journal with articles by women, discussing the
2006 Women's Summer Outreach Program with its organizers Hanna
Wallach and Chris Ball, following up with that program's
participants, and encouraging women to apply for Google Summer of
Code and connecting them with mentors. When we only ended up having
one female participant in Google Summer of Code that year, we
decided to create the dedicated internship opportunities for women.
There were 15 and 23 women respectively at the GNOME women's dinners
at GUADEC in 2010 and the Desktop Summit in 2011. So the outreach
effort has definitely worked.
[1]
http://images49.fotki.com/v856/filevUZx/7142f/7/441267/7802004/081.jpg
Q. Has it been easy to convince people to mentor projects? What
proportion of the mentors are male?
People who were involved in organizing the program were the original
mentors and provided the initial participants with a reasonable
choice of projects to contribute to. We have been encouraging people
in the GNOME community to sign up as mentors throughout, but seeing
the work of the initial participants was likely the most effective
encouragement that got people to add themselves to the list. Because
pairing up participants with mentors is one of the key components of
the program, I occasionally had to ask people about mentoring
specific projects. They were usually happy to help.
For the first round, we started out with 8 projects and 9 mentors,
out of these 3 were women. For the latest, third round, we had 18
project and 27 mentors, with 7 women among them. So about 70% of
mentors are men, which is expected, since we need the help of
everyone in the community in mentoring the participants. Two of the
women who participated in the program as interns, Luciana Fujii
Pontello and Ekaterina Gerasimova, have now become mentors.
Q. Do you think we're doing a good job as mentors in the GNOME
community? What could we be doing better?
We have a lot of resources for someone who wants to start
contributing to GNOME and people are generally happy to help, but we
need to have more people taking an active role in informally
mentoring newcomers. It'd be great if there were more people hanging
out on #gnome-love and answering questions there.
It'd also be great if people suggested a suitable first bug to fix
to newcomers and mentored them through the process of getting the
patch committed. We should not be afraid to direct newcomers in what
bug to fix first, as this will actually help them get started and
learn things that will inform their subsequent contributions. Every
Detail Matters is a great initiative to point out bugs that are
important to fix to contributors with any level of experience.
Recently, we used the list of mentors we already had for the
Outreach Program for Women to start a more general list of GNOME
mentors [1] who are willing to informally mentor any newcomer any
time throughout the year. We encourage everyone to add their
projects and themselves to that list!
This list is included on the page with links to mentors in different
free software organizations [2], that is hosted on the Google Summer
of Code wiki. I initiated creating this resource based on our
experience in the GNOME Outreach Program for Women of connecting
applicants with mentors and requiring that they complete a first
patch with the help of the mentor during the application process.
Making sure that applicants are connected with the project's mentor
and make the first contribution before or as part of the application
process is essential for a successful internship.
[1] http://live.gnome.org/GnomeLove/Mentors
[2] http://code.google.com/p/google-summer-of-code/wiki/Mentors
Q. What do you think are the main issues that we need to work on as a
community to see more women getting involved in GNOME?
We need to spread the word more about the mentorship and internship
opportunities we have for women. Out of the 12 participants we have
this round, 3 received this information because I contacted people
or groups in the area. One of these women and 6 others were
encouraged to apply by someone locally. One woman was regularly
reading Planet GNOME and 2 others were already involved in the GNOME
community. If more people use the resources we provide for spreading
the word at their university and local technical community for the
next round, we would reach more women! The request to do so and the
resources will be out sometime in February.
Beyond that, it would be great to organize events at universities
and local technical communities that teach people the basics of how
to contribute to free software, such as using a bug tracker,
revision control system, and IRC. It's important to start with
basics in order to attract a wider audience. The Open Source
Workshop [1] at MIT organized by OpenHatch is one example of such
event that many students found useful. It has excellent materials
and interactive exercises available online. Also, it would be great
to organize events where people can get help installing GNOME and
starting to contribute to it. Being able to try things in a
supportive environment where experienced contributors can help
resolve any setback within minutes would help many people make the
first step, which is the hardest. Emphasizing the collaborative
style and mentioning the Outreach Program for Women in advertising
such events would help attract women to attend them.
[1] http://openhatch.org/wiki/Open_Source_Workshop
Q. Given the success of the first two editions of the Outreach Program
for Women, do you anticipate the program continuing in future years?
We have just started the third round of the program, which had even
more strong applicants than the two previous rounds. We are planning
to run another round of the program from May to August, with an
application deadline in early April.
There are currently many people and organizations making an effort
to get more women involved in free software, and I expect it to
become a lot more common for women to be involved in free software
projects in the next few years. However, even when people inside the
project will take it as a matter of course that women are involved,
it will still take even longer until this view is shared by society
in general. We should try to continue the program as long as we see
that there are women who have a potential to be strong contributors
out there, who are not getting involved in the same ways as men who
have this potential.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dave Neary" <dneary gnome org <mailto:dneary gnome org>>
To: "Marina Zhurakhinskaya" <marinaz redhat com
<mailto:marinaz redhat com>>
Cc: "Juanjo Marin" <juanjomarin96 yahoo es
<mailto:juanjomarin96 yahoo es>>, "Emily Gonyer"
<emilyyrose gmail com <mailto:emilyyrose gmail com>>,
karen gnome org <mailto:karen gnome org>
Sent: Tuesday, December 6, 2011 3:52:11 AM
Subject: Re: Annual report - can I interview you?
Hi,
On 12/05/2011 07:14 PM, Marina Zhurakhinskaya wrote:
Thanks for making plans to cover mentorship in the annual
report! I'll be happy to do an interview and help with any
materials about mentorship for the report.
How about we start it out as a written Q&A, and then you can
follow up with more questions via e-mail or on IRC based on my
answers if you'd like? That way I'll get a bit more time to
think about the answers to the core questions, but then we can
incorporate questions based on the answers I provide and
introduce an element of a discussion into the interview. I'm
generally around this week and next.
Sure! I was thinking that a half an hour IRC chat which we could edit
afterwards might come across more as a conversation than a Q&A - but I'd
be happy to send you a few questions to allow you to organise your
thoughts. We can either publish these, or do the conversation format
afterwards, whichever you prefer. Thanks!
Q. Marina, you've co-ordinated the GNOME Outreach Program for Women for
the past two years. Can you tell us how you got involved in GNOME
yourself?
Q. How did you end up co-ordinating the Outreach Program for Women?
Q. Has it been easy to convince people to mentor projects? What
proportion of the mentors are male?
Q. Do you think we're doing a good job as mentors in the GNOME
community? What could we be doing better?
Q. What do you think are the main issues that we need to work on as a
community to see more women getting involved in GNOME?
Q. Given the success of the first two editions of the Outreach Program
for Women, do you anticipate the program continuing in future years?
Thanks for your help!
Cheers,
Dave.
--
Dave Neary
GNOME Foundation member
dneary gnome org <mailto:dneary gnome org>
Jabber: nearyd gmail com <mailto:nearyd gmail com>
--
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marketing-list gnome org <mailto:marketing-list gnome org>
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--
Whatever you can do, or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius,
power and magic in it. - Goethe
Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don't matter
and those who matter don't mind. - Dr.Seuss
Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that
counts can be counted. - Albert Einstein
--
Dave Neary
GNOME Foundation member
dneary gnome org
Jabber: nearyd gmail com
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